Example Data Table
| Scenario | Input | Assumption | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small remodel | 12 yd³ mixed debris, 10 yd³ capacity | 0.85 load factor, 10 mi one-way | Trips auto-estimated, itemized total |
| Concrete removal | 4.0 tons concrete, 3.0 ton payload | 0.80 load factor, disposal per ton | Trips limited by weight |
| Roofing cleanup | 18 yd³ shingles, 15 yd³ capacity | Fuel surcharge 8%, minimum haul charge | Totals include surcharge and minimum |
Use the table as a starting point and adjust rates for your area.
Formula Used
- Convert to cubic yards: yd³ = ft³ ÷ 27, and yd³ = m³ × 1.30795.
- Convert density: tons per yd³ = (lb per yd³) ÷ 2000.
- Derive weight: tons = yd³ × tons per yd³.
- Derive volume: yd³ = tons ÷ tons per yd³.
- Effective limits: effective capacity = capacity × load factor.
- Trips: max(ceil(volume ÷ eff capacity), ceil(weight ÷ eff payload)).
- Hauling cost: (trip rate × trips) + (mile rate × round-trip miles × trips) + (hourly model if used), then apply minimum.
- Disposal cost: per ton or per yd³, plus any flat dump fees.
- Fuel surcharge: hauling × surcharge %.
- Tax: taxable subtotal × tax % (optionally includes disposal).
- Overhead & profit: subtotal × O&P %.
- Total: subtotal + tax + O&P − discount.
How to Use This Calculator
- Select “By volume” or “By weight” based on what you know.
- Choose a debris type, or select custom density.
- Enter container capacity and payload limits per trip.
- Set distance and your hauling rate method (trip, mile, hour).
- Enter disposal fees and any flat dump, permit, or equipment fees.
- Add labor, surcharges, tax, and markup as needed.
- Press Calculate to view totals and download files.
Why haul-away estimates matter
Haul-away costs often swing project margins because debris volumes grow quickly as demolition progresses. A reliable estimate helps you compare hauling methods, prevent schedule delays, and reduce over-ordering of bins or labor. This calculator keeps pricing transparent by separating haul, disposal, and business add-ons.
Understand volume versus weight
Most debris is priced by either cubic volume or tonnage. Light materials like lumber fill space before they hit weight limits, while concrete reaches payload limits fast. By converting both directions using density, you can test whether your job is volume‑limited or weight‑limited before booking trucks.
Debris density benchmarks
Typical mixed construction debris ranges around 700–1,000 lb per cubic yard, while moist soil may reach 1,600–2,000 and broken concrete can exceed 2,200. If your facility provides scale tickets, enter a custom density to align estimates with local material behavior.
Trip capacity and load factor
Container size is not the same as usable capacity. Safety, tarping, and uneven loading reduce what you can carry. The load factor in this tool applies a practical fraction to both cubic yards and payload tons, producing a more realistic trip count for budgeting and crew planning.
Hauling cost drivers
Mileage is only one driver. Many contractors blend a per‑trip fee for mobilization, a per‑mile rate for fuel and wear, and a time component for queueing at transfer stations. Use the minimum haul charge to cover short runs where fixed costs dominate. Include dump wait times, gate hours, and traffic patterns in your assumptions; a ten‑minute queue can compound across trips. When you track tickets, you can calibrate rates and density, improving accuracy over future projects.
Disposal fees and surcharges
Disposal rates vary by stream and contamination rules. Landfills may bill per ton, transfer stations may bill per yard, and many sites add scale, entry, or environmental fees. Separating these items lets you pinpoint whether savings come from cleaner sorting or shorter haul distance.
Taxes, markup, and discounts
Local rules determine what is taxable, so the calculator lets you include or exclude disposal from tax. Overhead and profit can be applied to direct costs for consistent proposals, while a discount option supports competitive bids without hiding the real cost structure.
Practical estimating workflow
Start with a site walk to classify debris and measure a rough pile or room volume. Confirm truck or trailer limits, then enter disposal rates from your preferred facility. Run best‑case and worst‑case scenarios by adjusting density and load factor, and export the breakdown for your estimate file.
Should I choose volume or weight mode?
Choose the mode that matches your best field measurement. If you can measure a pile or container fill, use volume. If you have scale tickets or a known tonnage, use weight. The calculator converts the other value using density.
How do I pick a realistic density?
Start with the preset material type, then refine using local scale data. Mixed debris commonly falls between 700 and 1,000 lb/yd³, while concrete and soil run much higher. If your facility reports tons and yards, derive density from tickets.
Why does the calculator use a load factor?
Loads rarely reach perfect capacity due to safety, uneven debris, and legal payload limits. The load factor reduces both usable volume and payload to reflect realistic hauling. Use 0.75–0.90 for most projects, and lower values for bulky, awkward loads.
How are trips calculated?
Trips are estimated from both constraints: volume divided by effective cubic capacity, and weight divided by effective payload. The higher of the two determines trips. You can override the trip count if you already know how many runs will occur.
What should I include in the haul rate inputs?
Enter a per‑trip fee for mobilization, a per‑mile rate for distance costs, and optional hours per trip with an hourly truck rate for waiting time. Use the minimum haul charge to cover short jobs where fixed costs dominate.
Are disposal fees taxable?
Taxability depends on local rules and how invoices are structured. Many regions tax hauling and labor but not landfill charges, while others tax the full service. Use the checkbox to include disposal in the taxable subtotal when required.
How do I validate the estimate after the job?
Compare the calculator breakdown to invoices and scale tickets. Update your default mile rate, wait time, and density based on actual data. Saving calibrated values improves future bids and helps explain cost drivers to clients or stakeholders.
Estimate haul-away costs quickly, plan budgets, avoid surprises today.